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Curry EXPO Returns to Expo ’70 Park
Curry EXPO Returns to Expo ’70 Park
Curry EXPO Returns to Expo ’70 Park
Curry EXPO Returns to Expo ’70 Park
Curry EXPO Returns to Expo ’70 Park
Food & Drink Scene

Curry EXPO Returns to Expo ’70 Park

A full weekend of curry under the spring sky

Western Japan’s largest curry event returns to Expo ’70 Park this April, bringing 24 curry vendors, sweets, live stage acts, and a full day of outdoor food festival energy to Suita. 

Curry EXPO returns to Expo ’70 Commemorative Park this April for its 13th edition, spreading across two weekends April 11 & 12, then again on the 18th and 19th.  Curry Expo turns the park’s Festival Plaza into one of Kansai’s most appealing spring food destinations. The event brings together Osaka-born spice curry alongside Indian, European, and soup curry styles, giving visitors a broad view of how wide the curry category has become in Japan. Both the official event site and the park describe it as one of western Japan’s largest curry events. 

This year’s park edition features 24 curry vendors, plus 6 sweets vendors, with additional spice and retort-curry sales on site. That mix turns the festival into an afternoon of comparison, wandering, and deciding whether to go classic, regional, meat-heavy, or fully spice-forward.  

The format is built for sampling. All curry roux is served in half-size portions, and the official pricing system is simple: two half-size curries plus rice for ¥1,400, a single half-size curry for ¥600, and rice on its own for ¥350. Toppings are sold separately by each vendor, and quantities are limited each day, so some dishes will sell out. For anyone trying to maximize variety, that half-portion setup is the right move — it encourages actual food festival behavior rather than committing to one full plate too early. 

Screenshot

What helps the event feel fuller is everything around the curry itself. There will be a bungee attraction for children, while the Curry EXPO also features stage programming and sweets as simultaneous content. The stage lineups include a steady run of idol groups, performers, and jump-rope stage acts spread across the day, which gives the festival a more active, fair-like rhythm rather than a static vendor row. 

And the setting matters. Expo ’70 Park already works well in spring, with broad lawns, easy walking space, and a pace that feels looser than city-center food events. Curry EXPO benefits from that openness. You can eat, walk, reset, and come back for another round without the cramped feeling that hits many urban food festivals by midday. The event is held at Festival Plaza (お祭り広場) inside the park’s Natural and Cultural Gardens, so it also folds naturally into a larger spring outing around the grounds. 

For Osaka readers, this is the kind of weekend event that earns the trip. It is easy to understand, genuinely social, and flexible enough to suit different kinds of visitors — families, food-focused day trippers, couples, or anyone who just wants to spend a spring afternoon outside with something better than standard park food. Curry EXPO has enough scale to feel like an event and enough variety to reward people who arrive hungry and stay curious. 

 

 Twenty-four curry shops in one place – The 2026 Expo ’70 Park edition brings together 24 curry vendors spanning Osaka spice curry, Indian curry, European curry, and soup curry styles. 

 Half-size portions make sampling easy – Festival servings are standardized as half-size curry portions, with a two-curry-and-rice set designed specifically for tasting across multiple shops. 

 Sweets and spice shopping round it out – Six sweets vendors join the lineup, and the official site also lists spice and retort-curry sales. 

 More than just food stalls – The official event includes stage programming throughout the day, plus a children’s bungee attraction confirmed by the park. 

 A spring festival setting that actually works – Festival Plaza inside Expo ’70 Park gives the event more room to breathe than most city-center food fairs. 

 

Photos: Curry Expo website

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Maps

Contact

  • Expo '70 Commemorative Park, Senribanpakukōen, Suita, Osaka 565-0826, Japan
  • https://curryexpo.com
  • @curry_expo

Opening Hours

Saturdays: 10:00-17:00
Sundays: 10:00-17:00

THE SCENE: FAQ’s

ACCESS

Venue: Festival Plaza, Expo ’70 Commemorative Park

Full Address: 1-1 Senri Banpakukoen, Suita, Osaka. 

Osaka Monorail → Bampaku-kinen-koen Station

This is the standard station for most visitors. From central Osaka, the common route is Osaka Metro Midosuji Line to Senri-Chuo Station, then transfer to the Osaka Monorail for Bampaku-kinen-koen Station. From there, enter the Natural and Cultural Gardens and head to Festival Plaza. 

Park entry and event check-in

The Curry EXPO FAQ states that visitors first enter through Expo ’70 Park’s Natural and Cultural Gardens, pay the park admission fee there, and then proceed to the event reception located at the southeast corner of Festival Plaza. 

Access tip

Because the event runs inside the park rather than directly outside a station, allow extra walking time beyond the train ride, especially if arriving near lunch.

SCHEDULE

Event dates: April 11, 12, 18, and 19, 2026. 

Daily hours: 10:00–17:00. 

Last order: 16:30. 

Weather policy: Light rain goes ahead; severe weather may lead to cancellation. 

Stage programming: The official stage schedule runs from around 11:00 into the 15:00 hour, with multiple performers across the day.

ADMISSION & FOOD PRICES

Event admission: Free. 

Park admission:  Expo ’70 Park notes that separate park admission of ¥260 is required even though the event itself is free. 

Food pricing:

  • Two half-size curries + rice: ¥1,400

  • One half-size curry: ¥600

  • Rice only: ¥350

  • Toppings: extra, paid directly at each booth. 

Payment notes: The event FAQ says electronic money is accepted at ticket sales points, but signal conditions can be unstable on site, so carrying cash is recommended. It also notes that some individual vendors may not accept electronic payment. 

Food format: All curry roux is served as half-size portions in official containers. The event also notes that serving presentation may differ from promotional photos. 

INFO & TIPS

Come hungry, but not too hungry

Because the menu system is built around half-size portions, this is one of those rare festivals where tasting widely actually makes sense. Start with two different curries before committing to add-ons. 

Expect some sell-outs

The official site states that offerings end when sold out, so earlier arrival gives you the widest choice. 

Cash is still smart

Even with electronic payment accepted in some places, the official FAQ specifically recommends carrying cash because on-site connectivity can be unstable and some booths do not support cashless payment. 

This is family-friendly by design

Expo ’70 Park confirms a children’s bungee attraction as part of the event, making this more flexible than a food-only fair. 

You can make a full park day of it

Because it’s staged inside Expo ’70 Park, this works best as part of a longer spring outing rather than a quick in-and-out lunch stop. The official park materials emphasize the larger grounds, seasonal flowers, and surrounding facilities. 

Contacts

Official Curry EXPO site: curryexpo.com 

Official Expo ’70 Park event page: expo70-park.jp/event/74948/ 

Organizer / operator: City Life NEW (listed on the official Curry EXPO site).

Booking

View The Scene

Curry Expo 2026

Rich
April 11–12
  • Expo '70 Commemorative Park, Senribanpakukōen, Suita, Osaka 565-0826, Japan
  • 10:00-17:00

  • Osaka Monorail → Bampaku-kinen-koen Station

  • Metro Midosuji Line → Senri-Chuo Station, then transfer to Osaka Monorail

  • Event is free, park admission and food are extra

  • curryexpo.com
  • Small rain will not stop the event, but severe weather may cancel it.

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